Randolph's v. Quidnick Co.

135 U.S. 457, 10 S. Ct. 655, 34 L. Ed. 200, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2032
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 14, 1890
Docket213
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 135 U.S. 457 (Randolph's v. Quidnick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randolph's v. Quidnick Co., 135 U.S. 457, 10 S. Ct. 655, 34 L. Ed. 200, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2032 (1890).

Opinion

Me. Justice Brewer

delivered the opinion of the court.

On August 2, 1883, Evan Randolph, the testator of complainants, filed his bill in equity in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Rhode Island, for the purpose of establishing his title to 4022 shares of the capital stock of the Quidnick Company, claiming to have purchased these shares on execution sales in March, 1883, for $275. The Quidnick Company was a corporation organized under the laws of Rhode Island, in May, 1862, with a capital stock of $500,000, divided into 5000 shares. Prior to December 1, 1873, the corporation had purchased some of its own stock, so that there was then outstanding only 4349 shares, of which 327 were held by the estate of Edward Hoyt, deceased; and the remainder, being the 4022 shares in controversy, by Amasa, William, Fanny and Mary Sprague, and the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing Company. At this time the Spragues, who were largely engaged in manufacturing and. other business, became embarrassed, and executed the transfers hereinafter referred to, and which have become the source of much litigation. Notwithstanding the embarrassments of the Spragues, the Quidnick Company was entirely solvent, out of debt, and the owner of large properties. Its stock was valued, by a committe'e of the creditors of the Spragues, at the time, at $374 a share; and'the dividends which, in the winter after the filing of this bill, the stock was entitled to as the proceeds of the sale of property and otherwise, amounting to over half a million of dollars. In other words, these complainants are asking the *459 interposition of a court of equity to establish their title to property worth over half a million of dollars, obtained by purchase at execution sales for $275. The immense disproportion between the value and the cost shocks the conscience of a chancellor and forbids the supporting action of a court of equity. Some rights must have suffered and some wrong must have been done by such a transaction, and a court of equity properly says that it will not lend its aid to further such an unconscionable speculation. The case Of Mississippi & Missouri Railroad v. Cromwell, 91 U. S. 643, forcibly -illustrates this rule. In' that case, Harrison recovered a judgment- in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Iowa, against Muscatine County for $6500. Under an execution on that-judgment, the marshal assumed to levy on seventeen hundred and fourteen shares of the capital stock of the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad Company, belonging to Muscatine County, and sold the same at public auction -to Cromwell, for the sum -of $50. The latter filed his bill against the railroad company and the county tó-. compel a transfer of this stock. The case was,.presented to this court in two .aspects: By.one, the stock in the company was worthless, and in reference to that the court observed: “ The property of the company was gone; its franchises were gone; the amount.which the stockholders had arranged to realize was gone; and consequently the stock could have been nothing but an empty name, and the attempt to k^ep .it afloat for speculative purposes is not such as should recommend it to a court of equity. The parties to such a transaction ought at least to be left to their remedies at law.- A court of equity should-have no sympathy with any such contrivances to gain a contingent or speculative advantage, if any such is to be gained.” .By the. other, it- appeared that through certain arrangements between this railroad company and another there was a possibility of realizing sixteen pér cent on the par value of the stock, which,-with interest to the time of the bringing of the suit; amounted to over $32,000. And with reference to that, the court said: “ He comes into court with a very bad grace when he asks to use its extraordinary powers to put him in posses *460 sion of thirty thousand dollars’ worth of stock for which he paid only fifty dollars. • The court is' not bound to shut its eyes to the evident character of the transaction. It Ayill never lend its aid to carry out an unconscionable bargain, but will leave the party to his remedy at law.” No language could be more appropriate to the case before us. Either this stock' had been so appropriated by prior transfers and transactions as to be absolutely worthless in the hands of the Spragues, or else it represented more than half a million of dollars.

It is doubtless true that property of large value, both real and personal, may be incumbered with mortgages or other liens to an amount something like its value, so that there remains in the owner but an equity of redemption of trifling value; and a creditor may, at execution sale, or otherwise, buy at a small price such equity, with a view to redemption from the liens; and a court of equity will then lend its aid to put him in a position where he may safely redeem. But, as will appear from facts to be narrated subsequently, this is.not such a case. The purchase was purely speculative. If the transfers theretofore made by the Spragues for the benefit of their creditors are sustained, the purchaser takes nothing. If they are not to be sustained they fail in toto, and the entire Avalué of the property belongs to this purchaser. So his purchase is one simply to speculate upon the chances of successfully attacking transfers of large property, made for the benefit of creditors, and with the view of depriving them of the benefits of such transfers. It is a case where equity, true to its ideas of substantial justice, refuses to be bound by the letter of legal procedure, or to lend its aid to a mere speculative purchase which threatens injury and ruin to a large body of honest creditors, who have trusted for the payment of their debts to the legal validity of proceedings theretofore taken.

Again, beyond the question of amount, is the matter, of time. The’ transfers by the Spragues were in. 1873. These execution purchases Avere in 1883. The transfers in 1873 Avere not made hastily, upon the judgment of the debtors alone, or without consultation with creditors. On the contrary, all creditors Avere invited, committees Avere appointed by them, *461 conferences had, and after weeks of examination and deliberation the substantial features of the arrangements were agreed upon between the creditors and debtors. The interests involved were immense. The committee of creditors appointed to examine into the assets and liabilities reported. the former at $19,495,247, and the latter at $11,475,448. These assets were various in character — manufacturing stocks, real estate,' stock in banks and other corporations, bonds, etc.- They were widely scattered — in Rhode Island, Maine, Connecticut and other States and Territories. These various properties were placed in the hands of a trustee, to be managed and disposed of for the benefit of creditors; and the provisions of the arrangements were accepted by ..nearly all the creditors. By these arrangements it- was provided that the trustee might continue the manufacturing ^business; and, in pursuance of the- authority thus conferred,' he did continue ,it, and before August, 1881, the amount of manufacturing business done by him was $29,802,286.10. ’

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Bluebook (online)
135 U.S. 457, 10 S. Ct. 655, 34 L. Ed. 200, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randolphs-v-quidnick-co-scotus-1890.